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April 30, 2003
Stephen Holl pointed out design elements at Bellevue Art Museum |
Steven Holl, designer of the Bellevue Art Museum and Seattle University's St. Ignatius Chapel, will speak at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 8, in the Illsley Ball Nordstrom Room of Benaroya Hall. The Hermann Pundt Memorial Lecture is sponsored by Praxis and Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects.
For information, contact the College of Architecture and Urban Planning, University of Washington at (206) 543-7679.
Chinese Garden work party
The monthly Seattle Chinese Garden Work Party is at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Song Mei Pavilion and Demonstration garden. Volunteers meet at the garden site at South Seattle Community College, 6000 16th Ave. S.W. The event is held the first Saturday of each month. For more information call Renee Visich at (206) 282-8040, extension 100.
Honoring the Olmsteds
Photo by Sean Michael Gathered in Victor Steinbrueck Park were: Douglas Jackson, president of the Friends of Seattle's Olmsted Parks; Richard Haag, landscape architect; Peter Steinbrueck, City Council President; Brooks Kolb, president of WASLA; and Don Benson, immediate-past-president of WASLA.
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Seattle City Council President Peter Steinbrueck met with landscape architects Friday at Victor Steinbrueck Park to commemorate last week's Landscape Architecture Week, and to read a City Council proclamation officially recognizing the Olmsted Centennial. The group also called attention to a new guide to Seattle's downtown urban parks published by the Washington Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects, and honored civic activist and landscape architect Richard Haag.
With activist architect Victor Steinbrueck, Richard Haag designed Victor Steinbrueck Park (formerly Market Park), which was built in 1981. Haag also designed Gas Works Park and collaborated in the design of Seattle Center. He played a role in preservation of Pike Place Market in the 1960s. A professor emeritus, Haag founded the Department of Landscape Architecture at the University of Washington and taught there for 40 years. He has been nominated for the American Society of Landscape Architects medal, the highest honor bestowed upon a landscape architect by the ASLA.
WASLA is a supporter of the National Olmsted Conference, today through Sunday, at South Lake Union Center. The conference commemorates this year’s Olmsted Centennial in Seattle. The Olmsted brothers, Frederick Law Jr. and John Charles Olmsted, designed Seattle's original park system in 1903 and are sons of Frederick Law Olmsted Sr. Their father designed New York's Central Park and is considered the founder of the profession of landscape architecture in the U.S. For more information about the Olmsted conference, call (206) 332-9915.
May 8: How to handle the press
The May 8 program and luncheon meeting of Marketing Associates of Spokane will be presented by Skip Bonuccelli of the Central Valley School District. Bonuccelli will address how to handle internal communication as well as the press and public when a business is facing a crisis situation.
The meeting will take place at noon at the Red Lion River Inn, 700 N. Division St., in Spokane. The cost is $15 for members and $25 for non-members. The reservation deadline is Monday. For membership information or to make a reservation, contact MAS Vice President David Dowers at (509) 536-3853 or see the MAS Web site at http://www.maspokane.org.
Green roof conference in Chicago
Greening Rooftops for Sustainable Communities, the first North American green roof infrastructure conference, awards and trade show, will be held May 29 and May 30 in Chicago, at the Congress Plaza Hotel.
Co-hosted by Green Roofs for Healthy Cities and the city of Chicago, the show features 45 speakers and presenters from nine countries. Presenters will discuss papers on supportive policies and programs from 10 cities, including Portland, Chicago, Toronto, New York, Berlin and Mexico City.
How-to sessions and case studies from over 10 projects, such as the Ford Rouge Center in Dearborn, the GAP's 910 Cherry project and Chicago City Hall will be presented. Research papers on subjects such as urban heat island reduction, energy efficiency, smart growth, plant survival and stormwater management will also be presented. Speaker bios as well as a short description of the presentations are available at http://www.greenroofs.ca/grhcc/agenda.htm.
Register online at http://www.greenroofs.ca/grhcc/register.htm. For more information, contact call Steven Peck, executive director, Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, at (416) 971-4494.
"GreenWorld -- A Collaborative Forum on Sustainable Design" will be held Thursday and Friday, during the week of Earth Day. It will focus on projects and products that advance sustainable techniques in design and execution. The forum will include exhibits at Fisher Pavilion at the Seattle Center Thursday, and project tours on Friday.
The program will showcase guest speakers David Orr, Rob Bennett and Gifford Pinchot III, educational programs, GreenWorld product exhibits, as well as the "What Makes it Green?" project boards and panel discussion.
Pinchot is co-founder of the Bainbridge Island Graduate Institute, which offers an MBA that integrates sustainability and social responsibility with innovation and profit. Bennett is a senior manager of the Office of Sustainable Development in Portland, and Orr is professor and chair of the Environmental Studies Program at Oberlin College.
Thursday's schedule is 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Friday's is 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday's 6:30 p.m. keynote presentation will spotlight Pinchot, speaking on "Sustainable Innovation: Making it Happen in the Real World." Friday will include local tours of sustainable projects, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For costs and times, call (206) 762-6471.
Vital signs of building designs
"The Built Environment -- What's Health Got To Do With It?" will be the subject of a presentation by Dr. Richard Jackson, of the Centers for Disease Control's National Center for Environmental Health. Sponsored by the UW School of Public Health and the College of Architecture and Urban Planning, the talk will be 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, in Room T-625 of the UW Health Sciences Center.
The way roads, buildings, neighborhoods, cities are built can have a dramatic effect on our health, Dr. Jackson asserts. Smarter building practices can decrease injuries and promote more physical activity, which in turn can reduce the frequency and severity of disease and epidemics. For more information, visit www.sphcm.washington.edu/news/builtenv.asp. The event is free.
SMPS releases local salary survey
The newest SMPS Seattle Salary Survey is available. The survey provides information on regional marketing salaries, benefits, job descriptions and other statistical data. This survey breaks the data into different types and sizes of AEC firms.
For a copy, contact Carol Waterbeck, Streeter Architects, (206) 621-9270, cawaterbeck@streeterarchitects.com or go to www.smpsseattle.org for further information.
I.M. Pei wins construction award
Photo courtesy of Pei Cobb Freed & Partners, Architects, LLP I.M. Pei’s East Wing of the National Gallery of Art is among the projects honored in the Innovation In Construction Awards.
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The National Building Museum and Turner Construction gave I. M. Pei the Henry C. Turner Prize for Innovation in Construction Technology. The prize recognizes notable advances and high achievement in construction methods and processes. During a 55-year career, Pei has worked with engineers and contractors to create buildings and other structures that have set new standards for construction quality.
Architect David Childs, engineer Leslie E. Robertson, and architectural author Carter Wiseman spoke with Pei about his role in innovations in construction technology -- from the East Wing of the National Gallery of Art, to the Bank of China Tower in Hong Kong, to the glass pyramid at the Louvre in Paris and the Miho Museum in Japan.
His design for the Bank of China Tower in Hong Kong inspired engineers to create the first space truss frame for a tall building. Pei’s glass pyramid at the Louvre in Paris required contractors and engineers to develop an innovative structural system to support the panes of glass. And his design and specifications for the Miho Museum in Japan required precision construction and finishing.
UW students enhance the Ave
Fifteen University of Washington architects-in-training will work through May designing new storefronts as part of revitalizing the struggling shopping area along University Way Northeast.
"What we want to do is enhance the quality and identity of the Ave," said Jim Nicholls, the architecture lecturer who will lead the studio. "It will be -- appropriately enough for an area with a university heritage -- a vision that comes from students."
The students are working out of what they call the Storefront Studio, in the former Tower Records store. They will study the present-day Ave, propose an improved streetscape and collaborate with interested landlords to redesign the facades of their buildings. The students will form a $70,000 Façade Improvement Program fund for building materials, administered through the city of Seattle and distributed by the Greater University Chamber of Commerce.
The students' design work is free to businesses, and Nicholls hopes some students will spend the summer helping build facades they design this spring.
As a second phase, architecture students may explore the impact of potential UW outreach offices in the U District -- possibly at the Tower site -- for such uses as the UW Extension or public-policy centers of the Evans School of Public Affairs. Using current land-use codes and design guidelines for the area, the studio will look at how additional UW uses could contribute to the neighborhood.
Special public displays are planned for the University District Street Fair May 17 and 18. For more information, contact Nicholls at (206) 616-4366, or jnicholl@u.washington.edu.
Celebrating Landscape Architecture Week
National Landscape Architecture Week is being celebrated through Sunday around the U.S., to raise public awareness and appreciation of landscape architects and their work.
National Landscape Architecture Week recognizes Saturday's birthday of Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903). Olmsted is considered the founder of the profession in North America. Several thousand landscape architects take part in National Landscape Architecture Week. Activities include government proclamations; a variety of community outreach activities, such as collaborative park design and education exhibits; and student design competitions. It is sponsored by members of the American Society of Landscape Architects, government agencies, businesses and universities.
April 16, 2003
FSi did engineering for the Crisis Action Facility near Washington, D.C. |
FSi Consulting Engineers, a mechanical, fire protection and sustainable engineering firm, has announced an address change. The new office is in the Smith Tower, 506 Second Ave., Suite 320. The phone is (206) 622-3321, and the fax is (206) 622-5804. The mailing address P.O. Box 4219 Seattle, WA 98104-0219.
As the lead consultant, FSi recently completed design on a 56,000-square-foot, $5.5 million design/build renovation to the Shore Intermediate Maintenance Facility in Everett. Other projects include multiple air traffic control towers for the FAA, an air quality project for Tacoma Public Schools, fire protection upgrades for wings of the UW Health Sciences Center, multiple prime consulting projects for Seattle and King County Housing Authorities, as well as a 100,000-square-foot Crisis Action Facility for the U.S. Joint Forces near Washington, D.C.
Prakash speaks on LeCorbusier
The University of Washington Architecture Lecture Series features UW Architecture Chair Vikram Prakash Thursday at 6:30 p.m. His speech will be titled "Chandigarh's Le Corbusier: Formal Orders on a Vast Indian Plain."
Prakash will address the making of Chandigarh, Le Corbusier's largest built project and an icon of modern architecture. India's new capital city, Chandigarh is recognized most for its radical master plan, its grand buildings of state, and its famous Open Hand monument that Le Corbusier designed as a symbol for the city.
Prakash's father was one of nine Indian architects who worked with Le Corbusier on the project. He will explore the complex aesthetics of Chandigarh buildings, and their meaning in terms of the persistent struggle between a global architecture and its regional expression. The free lecture will be held in Room 147 of the Architecture Hall. More information about the book can be found at www.washington.edu/uwpress/search/books/PRACHA.html.
APWA hosts panel on permitting issues
The American Public Works Association Management & Public Administration Committee is presenting a Wednesday, April 23, workshop about permitting issues and solutions. The workshop brings together a panel of four specialists from public agencies responsible for resource-related permits within the Puget Sound region. They will share their agency policies regarding specific permits and offer insights into shortening and/or streamlining the permit process.
The workshop will have two sessions followed by discussions with the panel members over dinner. The first session will include project impacts from permit related issues, and the second session will include discussions about how to improve the process. Agencies represented include the Department of Ecology and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The event will be at 4 p.m. at the Rock Salt Steak House, 1232 Westlake Ave. N., Seattle. Reservations are required. The price (including dinner) is $40 for reservations postmarked by Friday, and $50 thereafter. Identify dinner entrée with reservation -- the choice is prime rib, prawn linguini, or vegetarian option.
Send registration request with payment (make checks payable to APWA) to: APWA/MPAC Permitting Workshop; c/o Municipal Research and Services Center, 2601 Fourth Ave., Suite 800, Seattle 98121-1280. For more information about the workshop, call Steven Haluschak at RoseWater Engineering, (206) 441- 9385.
Tour of City Hall, Justice Center Friday
AIA Seattle Committee on Design and University of Washington Department of Architecture present a tour of the Seattle City Hall/Justice Center from 4 to 7 p.m. Friday. The tour is given in cooperation with the city of Seattle; Bassetti Architects; Bohlin Cywinski Jackson; NBBJ; Shiels Obletz Johnsen; Swift & Company; and University Book Store.
The tour begins at 4 p.m. at Seattle Municipal Court main entrance, 600 Fifth Ave., followed by the 4:30 Justice Center tour, and a 5 p.m. design dialog/panel presentation. A reception follows.
The tours require flat hard-sole shoes. All attendees must register in advance. The moderator will be Peter Steinbrueck, Seattle City Council president. Featured panelists include Barbara Swift, Swift & Co.; Peter Bohlin, Greg Hepp, Bassetti Architects | Bohlin Cywinski Jackson; and Duncan Thieme and Rick Zieve, NBBJ. Cost is $20 for AIA Seattle members and $25 for non-members.
Post-9/11 construction on the Pentagon
The Northwest Chapter of Design Build Institute of America is holding a luncheon chapter meeting on post-9/11 reconstruction, from noon to 1:30 p.m. today. Immediately following the luncheon program will be a Northwest chapter business meeting.
The luncheon features Robert Daniels, 2003 DBIA National chair and executive vice president and eastern division manager of Hensel Phelps Construction Co. Daniels' luncheon presentation will be "The Pentagon Project and Post-9/11 Reconstruction" and "What Can a Membership in DBIA Do for You?" The luncheon will be held at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Sequoia Room, 1113 Sixth Ave. The cost is $25 for DBIA members and $35 for non-members. Contact Vicky Joslin at vicky.joslin@mortenson.com or (425) 497-6605 to register.
Architect Kreager to talk about 'the D word'
Architect Bill Kreager will talk about building new housing when the supply of affordable land is shrinking, at a Washington Association of Realtors Event on Wednesday, April 23. The presentation will run from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Evergreen Room of the Doubletree Hotel Seattle Airport. Kreager, of Mithun, is an advocate of the New Urbanism style of residential building. He "challenges negative assumptions about the 'D' word -- density" by retaining warmth and attractiveness in developments of up to 30 homes per acre, the association says. For information, call the association in Olympia at (800) 562-6024.
April 9, 2003
The Northwest Washington Chapter of American Institute of Architects is sponsoring a lecture on April 16 entitled "Scandinavian Housing on the Waterfront, in the City, in the Park."
Gunnar Nystrom, an instructor in the Department of Spatial Planning, Blekinge Institute of Technology in Karlskrona, Sweden, will present. The lecture will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Fairhaven Park Pavilion, Bellingham.
Nystrom's presentation will focus on eight different housing schemes in Sweden, Finland and Denmark, comprising waterfront renewal projects, Garden City projects, and dwellings in parks.
For more information, contact Tom Entrikin, Executive Director, AIA Northwest Washington, (360) 671-9555. The Web site is www.nwaia.org. Seating is limited. RSVP by 5 p.m. Friday.
April 15 discussion on public sector contracting
Trends, issues and sustainability in public sector contracting will be the subject of the this month's Society of American Military Engineers seminar on April 15. Guests for the 10 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. event are Cheryl Anderson, contracting officer with the Seattle District U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and Tony Gale, with the City of Seattle. The focus topics will be current and future trends and methods of contracting with A/E's and construction contractors and the contracts for sustainable buildings. This will be an interactive discussion with guests to promote understanding of current and future directions contracts will take in the public sector. Cost: $5.00 per person. RSVP by Friday to Andy Hough at andy.hough@skanskausa.com.
The SAME luncheon will follow, from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. The speaker will be Tom Tierney, deputy chief executive officer in charge of labor, police and security. As managing director of the port’s newest division, Economic Development, Tierney oversees port real estate and economic development activities, and provides leadership in regional transportation. He will give a presentation on the port’s priorities in terms of development of seaport and airport infrastructure, including $500 million earmarked for airport projects and the redevelopment of the Seattle waterfront. Cost is $25. RSVP by Thursday to Susan Selby at sususan.selby@hartcrowser.com. Both events will be at Swedish Cultural Center, 1920 Dexter Ave.
April 2, 2003
Guadarrama and Thompson |
Using case studies and proven strategies, Guadarrama and Thompson will go beyond the basics to show what a marketer would need to know to develop a successful marketing program and improve sales in a firm -- and how to have fun in the process. The series schedule is: Wednesday, Marketing Roles, Responsibilities, and Systems; April 9, Marketing Plans and Budgets; April 16, Public Relations Tools and Tricks; April 23, Proposals That Win; and April 30, Presentation Strategies and Structure.
The cost for SMPS members is $80 per session or $325 for five sessions, and for non-members $100 per session, or $425 for all 5 sessions. Classes will be held from 4 to 6:30 p.m. at Sellen Construction, Westlake Ave. N., Seattle. For more information about the Education Series, contact Grace Vigil at Parametrix at (425) 822-8880.
Cierra relocates to Belltown
To accommodate additional staff, Cierra Associates has moved to larger offices in Belltown. Their new address is 2505 Third Ave., Suite 204, 98121. Telephone remains the same: (206) 442-0112.
Students push limits of sticks and glue
Jon Engel, Cascade High School |
Area high school students recently put their math and science skills to the test when they tried to resist a 2,000-pound load with bridges made only of Popsicle sticks and Elmer’s glue.
Three months of planning led to 30 seconds of snap, crackle and pop when the bridges started to break at the 8th Annual Popsicle Stick Bridge Contest at Crossroads Shopping Center in Bellevue. The contest was started by the Seattle American Society of Civil Engineers Younger Member Forum as part of the annual Puget Sound Engineering Council’s Engineering Fair.
This year’s winners are Cascade High School Team, first; Auburn Riverside High School Team, second; and Edmonds Cyberschool Team, third. The overall rankings combined scores from aesthetics judging, strength of the bridge, and the best estimation of the bridge’s capacity.
The Seattle ASCE Younger Member Forum has a mission to educate the community about civil engineering and promote engineering careers among high school students. Three months before the day of the event, the YMF engineers team up with university students and visit each high school to explain the contest rules and give the students tips for designing their bridges.
March 26, 2003
The 1.9-million pound removable spillway weir recently attached to the Lower Granite Lock and Dam on the Snake River was recently named the nation's best engineering achievement by the American Council of Engineering Companies.
Called an "engineering marvel," the weir designed by Jacobs Civil Inc. for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, was chosen best engineering achievement in a field that included such projects as the Seahawks Stadium, Boston's Downtown "Bunker Hill" Bridge and the Milwaukee Art Museum.
Salmon production from the Snake River in Washington state had declined to almost an endangered species level over the years, a direct result of the river's four hydroelectric dams. As an alternative to dam removal, Jacobs designed the removable weir -- a structure that was attached to the dam with hinges allowing the weir to be rotated and submerged, depending on water level need. With a 6,000 cubic foot per second water discharge rate, tests show significantly more juvenile salmon now pass through the dam than before.
Another 2003 ACEC Grand Award winner was Magnusson Klemencic Associates for the Seahawks Stadium. With seats closer to the playing field than any other National Football League stadium, the Seahawks Stadium features a cantilevered design with no columns to block the fans' view. The roof is decoupled from the seating bowl allowing independent movement during an earthquake.
Central Library art needed
The Seattle Public Library seeks artists whose work deals with social structures, people and systems to develop permanent art in a wide variety of media for the new Central Library, design by Rem Koolhaas. The artists will be invited to explore the library, its staff and clients, its functions and collections and to develop projects that address these topics. Proposals should embody the questioning and pursuit of ideas that characterize a library.
Through short residencies at the library in 2003, selected artists will develop designs for permanent works of art to be installed in the new library. The application deadline is Friday. Applications are available at www.seattle.gov/arts (select funding applications") or by calling (206) 615-1801.
Fajardo speaks on globalization
Rafael Fajardo, professor of electronic and digital media at the University of Denver, on Tuesday presents cross-cultural insights gained from six years studying design at the U.S.-Mexico border. Living on the border, he researched and participated in the local people's music, words and marks on spaces created to express their regional identity.
Fajardo has noted a growing movement internationally to establish distinct voices, visions and spaces that counter the homogenizing influences of corporate globalization. "What marks a place as global, local, American, Mexican?" he asks. "Along the U.S.-Mexico border, where the industrialized world meets the developing world face to face, there is an acute hunger to communicate a unique identity." Tickets are $10. The 6:30 p.m. lecture will be held at Seattle Art Museum.
Columbia Branch design on display
The new design for the Columbia Branch of Seattle Public Library is on display at the library 4721 Rainier Ave. S. Cardwell Architects designed the $3.2 million 5,595-square-foot expansion. The facility will also feature artwork by Gu Xiong, a mixed-media artist from Vancouver, B.C.
The library is in the Columbia City Landmark District and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The next steps are to complete landmark review and permitting processes before bidding the project. For more information, call (206) 386-4624. The project is expected to be complete next year.
One-stop shopping for glass art
A new catalog and Web site has simplified the search for architectural glass for design professionals. The gallery provides a single source of hand-crafted architectural and functional glass art, bridging the gap between fine art and the needs of designers and architects.
A Seattle-based venture, the Glass Artists Gallery (www.GlassArtistsGallery.com) represents more than 50 creators of functional and architectural art glass.
The gallery deals only with studio glass, focusing on functional art. It is trade-oriented and it does not handle mass produced glass. Customers can choose from stocked items or they can commission work through the gallery. Each artist represented by the gallery has been juried for admission, based in part on the artist's experience dealing with the architectural and design communities.
The catalog is divided into eight categories -- lighting, sinks, tiles, wall art, architectural glass, furniture, sculpture, vessels -- making it easy for design or architectural professionals to find the piece they need. It costs $49.95, and it is updated regularly to reflect the gallery's newest work, as well as to introduce new artists as they are accepted. The price of the catalog is refunded when a customer places a first order. Glass Artists Gallery is at 2010 Killarney Way S.E., Bellevue. Call (877) 320-0800, or e-mail Info@GlassArtistsGallery.com.
Oak Harbor hires Berryman & Henigar
Berryman & Henigar has been awarded an engineering services contract from the city of Oak Harbor. Berryman & Henigar will be providing a variety of engineering services, such as scoping sewer and stormwater plans and helping to explore establishing a Local Improvement District to provide municipal sewers to the Scenic Heights neighborhood.
Berryman is also conducting a comprehensive management audit of the city’s Engineering Services Department. The audit will analyze work procedures and identify ways to improve customer service. "It will be invaluable in fostering an understanding of how to measure our performance and, through this measurement, how to improve operations," said Steve Powers, director of Development Services for the city.
Berryman & Henigar provides municipal management consulting, civil engineering, public finance, building safety, asset management, and program and construction management to public agencies. Further information is available on the Web at www.bhiinc.com.
March 19, 2003
The New York-based architectural firm LOT/EK will give a lecture at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Seattle Art Museum, in Plestcheeff Auditorium. For nearly a decade, LOT/EK has blurred the boundaries between art, architecture, entertainment and information. The firm's incorporation of industrial salvaged items has influenced a number of firms, and their work has been featured in New York's Museum of Modern Art, Whitney and Museum of American Art. LOT/EK recently completed its largest project to date -- the Bowen Contemporary Art Foundation in New York -- and will be presenting an overview of the past eight years of work.
Tickets are $10 for SAM members, $12 non-members, and can purchased in advance at the SAM box office (206) 654-3121.
Lecture: search for a silver lining
The American Society for Engineering Management sponsors a presentation March 26 by John Medina on "Finding the Silver Lining: Turning Bad to Good." It will be held 5 to 7:30 p.m. at Rock Salt Steak House at Latitude 47, 1232 Westlake Ave. N.
This presentation will explain a philosophy and approach that Medina says will lead to greater successes and a more enjoyable life. Medina will discuss examples of situations that could have been damaging without responsive action. The objective is to encourage a way of thinking that will turn bad into good.
Medina is district director of LDC Design Group in Bellevue, providing civil, transportation and project management services to public agencies, and site engineering for private development. He is a registered professional civil engineer in California and Washington. Cost, including dinner, is $25, with reservations by Friday. After Friday the cost is $30 for members and non-members. Call (206) 695-6670, or e-mail lkd@ shanwil.com.
McCament joins state architects board
J.J. McCament of Tacoma has been appointed by Gov. Gary Locke to the Washington Board of Registration for Architects. McCament was appointed to fill the public position. The position cannot be filled by an architect or a person with a professional connection to an architect or firm. She is currently a project manager in the economic development department of Tacoma. McCament has 25 years of management, real estate development, land use, economic development and teaching experience.
AIA re-alignment means new directors
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Clark |
The six managing directors are Phil Simon, marketing and promotion; Terence Poltrack, communications; Rodney Clark, government affairs; James Gaines, professional practice; CD Pangallo, continuing education; Richard L. Hayes, knowledge resources.
"Members have strongly expressed the need to work together to generate knowledge and information that is comprehensive, relevant, concise and easily accessible," said Norman L. Koonce, executive vice president and chief executive officer of the AIA. "We also need to be effective advocates for and communicators about our profession, leveraging our knowledge wherever possible. Finally, we must maintain strong relationships throughout the design and construction industry and society at large.
AIA represents more than 70,000 licensed architects and allied professionals.
March 12, 2003
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Burwell |
The New Faces of Engineering program recognizes 109 nominees out of 1.8 million engineers in the U.S. The program is designed to boost public awareness of the newest generation of engineers. To qualify, engineers had to have worked on unique or high profile projects and/or engineering achievements during the last two to five years.
Burwell was dispatched within an hour of the Nisqually earthquake and inspected damaged buildings, assessing more than 15 properties. She has worked on several Seattle area projects including gravity and steel design on the Seattle Justice Center, pre- and post-implosion monitoring on the Kingdome, and historic renovation of the Harborview Medical Center addition.
She serves on Magnusson Klemencic committees charged with developing new design guidelines and recommendations, such as the steel, earthquake and building preservation expert groups. She also is co-facilitator of the firm's Design Engineer Forum, an in-house discussion group for younger engineers.
Burwell was nominated by the American Society of Civil Engineers.
Hargreaves on the WTC team
San Francisco-based Hargreaves Associates, which is designing South Lake Union Park, is on the winning team for the World Trade Center site competition, with Studio Daniel Libeskind.
Memory Foundations, the winning design, leaves a portion of the World Trade Center slurry wall exposed, as a symbol of endurance and a setting for the museum and upcoming memorial competition. At street level, two large public places were designed for the scheme, the Park of Heroes and the Wedge of Light. The Wedge of Light allows that each year on Sept. 11, between the hours of 8:46 a.m., when the first plane hit and 10:28 a.m., when the second tower collapsed, the sun will shine without shadow on the site. A 1,776-foot tall spire will re-establish a new skyline for Lower Manhattan.
"The landscape architect provides an important holistic view in a team collaboration like this one," says George Hargreaves, founding principal of the firm and chair of the Landscape Architecture Department at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. "We relish this role on multidisciplinary teams both large and small."
He said one goal for Hargreaves is to strengthen the connection of the site to Lower Manhattan, New York City and the world.
In Seattle, Hargreaves Associates is working on the Brightwater Wastewater Treatment Facility and the South Lake Union Park.
Wastewater treatment design forum
Bergstrom |
Speaking at the 25th Annual Washington Water/Wastewater Operations Workshop in Spokane, Bergstrom will discuss the use of membranes as filter media in the water and wastewater arenas.
The presentation begins at 8:30 a.m. at the Spokane Center. The conference, hosted by the Washington Environmental Training Center, is the largest workshop of its kind in the Northwest. For more information, call the WETRC at (800) 562-0858 ext. 1, or go to www.ivygreen.ctc.edu/wetrc/wow_brochure.htm.
New name, location for Gustafson
Gustafson Partners Ltd. recently announced a name and address change. The new name is Gustafson Guthrie Nichol Ltd., and the offices are in Pier 55, 1101 Alaskan Way, floor 3. The phone is (206) 903-6802, and fax is (206) 903-6804.
Gustafson Guthrie Nichol is working on the Princess Diana memorial in London's Hyde Park and Boston's North End Parks. It is working with Boston's Wallace Floyd Design Group on the Boston project, and British architect Neil Porter on the memorial.
What's the forecast for Spokane?
The Thursday program and luncheon meeting of Marketing Associates of Spokane will be presented by Randy Barcus, chief economist for Avista Corp. Barcus will discuss the Spokane region’s economy, including his forecast for the coming months.
The meeting will be held at noon at the WestCoast Grand Hotel at the Park, 303 W. North River Drive in Spokane. The cost is $15 for MAS members and $25 for non-members. Reservation deadline is Monday. For membership information or to make a reservation, contact MAS vice president David Dowers at (509) 536-3853 or see the MAS Web site at www.maspokane.org.
March 5, 2003
Redmond's GeoEngineers will merge with Applied Environmental Services of Port Orchard. AES has provided natural resource and regulatory services throughout the Northwest and Alaska since Wayne Wright and Lisa Berntsen founded the company in 1993. AES specializes in wetlands consulting, fisheries biology, wildlife investigations, nearshore habitat assessments, underwater scuba and video surveys, and aquatic habitat restoration services.
GeoEngineers’ core strengths are in earth sciences and engineering, water resource management, environmental site investigations and remediation, and GIS/data management.
"Their work is creative yet practical, especially in reaching balance between human development pressures and our highly valued aquatic and terrestrial species and ecosystems," said GeoEngineers president Jim Miller. AES will assume the GeoEngineers identity, and retain the Port Orchard location.
UW lecture by Boym Partners
In conjunction with the Bellevue Art Museum exhibition "Oh Boym! A Slideshow of Design," Constantin and Laurene Boym will discuss their work, their process and their design philosophy at 7 p.m. Thursday. The free lecture will be held at University of Washington, Kane Lecture Hall, Room 110.
"Oh Boym!" showcases the work of the Boym Partners. Running through April 13, it is the first exhibit to concentrate on the work of this New York City design studio, revealing the sources and development of their designs. For information, call (425) 519-0760.
Row Houses founder speaks Friday
Rick Lowe will lecture at Seattle Art Museum's Plestcheeff Auditorium at 7 p.m. Friday.
Founder of Project Row Houses, a neighborhood-based public art program that renovated 22 shotgun-style houses in one of Houston's poorest neighborhoods, Lowe worked with others to create galleries, workshop spaces, offices and housing as places for young single mothers to learn life skills.
Lowe's work has been included in national and international exhibitions and programs. He is the recipient of the Heinz Award for Arts and Humanities, a Loeb Fellow at Harvard University School of Design and chief arts planner of the new downtown Seattle Central Public Library with architect Rem Koolhaas.
Tickets are $8 for SAM members, $10 for non-members. Order tickets in advance by calling the SAM Box Office at (206) 654-3121.
Open house on regulating design
David Spiker, guest editor of Arcade, will speak at an open house Thursday on "Regulating Design." Arcade is an architecture/design journal for the Northwest.
The open house will be held at 5:30 p.m. at the Production Network, 1000 N. Northlake Way, just north of the Adobe software campus between Stone Way and the Aurora Bridge.
Lessons from the WTC clean-up
The Seattle Post of the Society of American Military Engineers sponsors a luncheon Tuesday discussing the lessons of the World Trade Center clean-up.
The speaker will be Jeff Tasca of AMEC Corp., who will present lessons learned by AMEC staff during recovery and cleanup operations at the World Trade Center site. AMEC was one of three contractors awarded removal contracts.
The event is hosted by Engineering Field Activity Northwest, Naval Facilities Engineering Command. The luncheon will be held at Consolidate Mess, Trident Ballroom, at the Bangor Naval Submarine Base, from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Attendees will need to give organizers their full names and Social Security numbers -- information that will be held in confidence and will be destroyed after the luncheon. The information must be provided with the RSVP, no later than Thursday. Cost is $10. Drivers need to bring their driver’s license, registration and proof of insurance. For information, contact Shannon Marsh at (360) 396-0043, fax (360) 396-0855, or e-mail marshSN@efanw.navfac.navy.mil.
What's the future for Spokane?
The March 13 program and luncheon meeting of Marketing Associates of Spokane will be presented by Randy Barcus, chief economist for Avista Corp. Barcus will discuss the Spokane region’s economy, including his forecast for the coming months.
The meeting will be held at noon at the WestCoast Grand Hotel at the Park, 303 W. North River Drive in Spokane. The cost is $15 for MAS members and $25 for non-members. Reservation deadline is Monday. For membership information or to make a reservation, contact MAS vice president David Dowers at (509) 536-3853 or see the MAS Web site at www.maspokane.org.
Gustafson changes name, location
Gustafson Partners Ltd. recently announced a name and address change. The new name is Gustafson Guthrie Nichol Ltd., and the offices are in Pier 55, 1101 Alaskan Way, floor 3. The phone is (206) 903-6802, and fax is (206) 903-6804.
Gustafson Guthrie Nichol is working on the Princess Diana memorial in London's Hyde Park and Boston's North End Parks. They are working with Boston's Wallace Floyd Design Group on the Boston project, and British architect Neil Porter on the memorial.
February 26, 2003
The curators of "Seattle Case Study Homes" will host a lecture and exhibit at the University of Washington College of Architecture and Urban Planning at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, in Room 147 of Architecture Hall. Seattle architects Blake Williams, Cory Harris and Joel Severud will present the plan book of modern, single-family houses for Seattle.
"Seattle Case Study Homes" is available Peter Miller Books in Seattle. The Northwest design journal Arcade is distributing free copies to new subscribers.
The book includes pages of project plans, perspectives and descriptive information. Similar to the original "Case Study Houses," published in Arts and Architecture from 1945-1966, it is a forum for architects and designers to demonstrate their skill in designing superior housing for Seattle. Eighty-four proposals were submitted by local, national and international architects and designers over a Web site.
Rasmussen elected to registration board
Peter Rasmussen of Tacoma has been elected regional director of the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards. Rasmussen, a member of the Washington Board of Registration for Architects, will represent the council’s Western Conference, which includes Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Guam, Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Northern Mariana Islands, Oregon, Utah and Washington. Rasmussen is president and founding principal of Architects Rasmussen Triebelhorn (A.R.T.), a Tacoma-based firm.
Students help plan International District
International District community groups have called upon the skills of budding designers from Asia and University of Washington. Eleven landscape architecture students from Japan's Chiba University will join their UW counterparts to develop urban design proposals for key sites in the Chinatown-Nihonmachi-Little Saigon-International District, where community groups are trying to preserve the area's heritage amid development pressure.
The Japanese students will see the neighborhood for the first time this month, but they have been working with UW students via the Web since September. In this global classroom project, students from the two nations collaborate not just on International District improvements but also on designs for a historic Japanese neighborhood near Tokyo called Kogane.
"This really is an experiment in cross-cultural collaboration," said Jeffrey Hou, assistant professor of landscape architecture. "We're discovering that you really can communicate ideas across borders."
The students hope to contribute to the International District urban design master plan under way. Key sites there include Hing Hay Park, King Street, 12th and Jackson, the Union Station area, Canton Alley and access to the Danny Woo Community Garden. For more information contact Hou at (206) 543-7225 or jhou@u.washington.edu. The project's Web site is www.caup.washington.edu/html/larch/chiba/.
AIA seeks projects for green forum
As part of the observation of Earth Day 2003, the AIA Seattle Committee on the Environment is looking for both built and unbuilt projects that show regional efforts to integrate environmentally responsible design methods and materials into buildings. Materials about the projects will be on display at the "What Makes It Green?" forum on sustainable design April 24 and 25, at Fisher Pavilion.
Projects must be located in Alaska, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Washington and Western Canada. Master planning, building or interiors projects can be submitted in either the built, not-yet-built or academic categories. A project submitted in a previous year is no longer eligible, unless it was submitted as not-yet-built and would now be in the built category.
Submitted projects must be built in an environmentally responsible way that exceeds industry standards (meeting energy code is not sufficient to qualify as energy conservation). Projects will be evaluated for quality as well as quantity of strategies, with an emphasis on results. Recognized rating systems (LEED & Built Green) can be used to clarify project information, although there is no specific point requirement for a project to be accepted.
On-line Submittals are due 11 a.m. Friday, and exhibit boards are due April 2, at AIA Seattle, 1911 First Ave. A fee of $50 will be due payable to AIA Seattle with the online registration. For more information, go to www.aiaseattle.org/wmig2003/.
February 19, 2003
Seattle-based Mithun recently announced that Paul Wanzer and Kim Munizza are returning to Mithun after starting their own architecture and design firm Wanzer Munizza Design Studio in 1995. Wanzer and Munizza were key members of the Mithun team that developed REI's new look in the 1990s.
Wanzer and Munizza both return to Mithun as principals and will help build Mithun's strength in integrating architecture and interior design, most notably in the practice areas of retail, restaurant, hospitality and high productivity workplaces.
"Kim and Paul are extremely talented designers, and we feel very privileged to have them back on our team," said Bert Gregory, Mithun CEO.
Wanzer Munizza Design Studio served such clients as Microsoft, Starbucks, Publicis and Willows Lodge.
Wanzer and Munizza each have 20 years of professional experience in architecture and interior design. Wanzer is a graduate of Washington State University, and Munizza is a graduate of the University of Washington. Prior to creating their own firm, their work at Mithun included REI Seattle store; The World of Eddie Bauer, Oakbrook, Ill.; Broadmoor Golf and Country Clubhouse renovation, Seattle; and Indian Summer Golf and Country Club, Yelm.
Skilling opens Chicago office
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The Seattle-based structural and civil engineering firm Skilling Ward Magnusson Barkshire has opened an office in Chicago.
The firm’s current Chicago projects include 2 East Erie, 111 South Wacker Drive, The Shoreham, the Chicago Courtyard Marriott and Epic Systems Corporate Headquarters, as well as Boeing’s recent move into the Morton Salt Building.
Ron Klemencic, president of Skilling, said, "Chicago is the first city where Skilling is employing a satellite approach. Linking the force of our Seattle office with the flexibility of Chicago personnel provides a unique opportunity to serve our clients in a new way."
Skilling’s headquarters will remain in Seattle, where the firm has been based for 80 years. The Chicago office will be lead by Kerry Galbraith. Galbraith has a 15-year background of work from the United Kingdom, New Zealand, the Middle East, Vietnam, Kuala Lumpur, the Philippines, Seattle and Chicago. Klemencic, who also serves as chairman of the International Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, says Skilling is optimistic about future opportunities in Chicago and the Midwest. "We’re betting on Chicago and believe that it offers long-term growth and continued vitality."
Skilling's local projects include Safeco Field, Seahawks Stadium and the Experience Music Project. World Architecture’s January 2003 issue named Skilling one of the top 10 structural engineering firms in the world.
ASEM forum on transportation crisis
"Transportation in Crisis: Lessons, Leadership & Legacy" will be the topic at the Feb. 26 American Society Engineering Management meeting. Kim Becklund, transportation policy advisor for the city of Bellevue, and Steven Thomsen, deputy director/county engineer, Snohomish County Department of Public Works will discuss focusing on our current situation, lessons learned and define steps towards a better transportation future.
The meeting will be held 5 to 7:30 p.m. at RockSalt Steak House/Latitude 47, 1232 Westlake Ave. N., Seattle. Program cost is $25 with reservations by Friday, or $30 thereafter for members and non-members. Reservations may be made by calling (206) 695-6670, or by e-mail to lkd@shanwil.com.
Olson Sundberg's first Asian project
Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects announced it is working on a private residence in Hong Kong. The project, the firm's first in Asia, explores connections between art, craft and architecture.
Located in Shek-O, a historic fishing village in the southeast corner of Hong Kong Island, the approximately 10,000-square-foot house is contemporary in design. The prominent rural site, which overlooks the South China Sea, has strongly influenced the design -- broad expanses of glass open to views in every direction; seamless transitions from inside to outside spaces merge the house into its landscape; and broad overhangs provide protection from the subtropical sun. The project is led by Jim Olson and Scott Allen, two of the firm's principals.
The Seattle-based firm is known for innovative designs of private homes, and also specializes in museums, galleries, university facilities and religious buildings.
February 12, 2003
The Seattle-based structural and civil engineering firm Skilling Ward Magnusson Barkshire has opened an office in Chicago.
The firm’s current Chicago projects include 2 East Erie, 111 South Wacker Drive, The Shoreham, the Chicago Courtyard Marriott and Epic Systems Corporate Headquarters, as well as Boeing’s recent move into the Morton Salt Building.
Ron Klemencic, president of Skilling, said "Chicago is the first city where Skilling is employing a satellite approach. Linking the force of our Seattle office with the flexibility of Chicago personnel provides a unique opportunity to serve our clients in a new way."
Skilling’s headquarters will remain in Seattle, where the firm has been based for 80 years. The Chicago office will be lead by Kerry Galbraith. Galbraith has a 15-year background of work from the United Kingdom, New Zealand, the Middle East, Vietnam, Kuala Lumpur, the Philippines, Seattle and Chicago. Klemencic, who also serves as chairman of the International Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, says Skilling is optimistic about future opportunities in Chicago and the Midwest. "We’re betting on Chicago and believe that it offers long-term growth and continued vitality."
Skilling's local projects include Safeco Field, Seahawks Stadium and the Experience Music Project. World Architecture’s January 2003 issue named Skilling one of the top 10 structural engineering firms in the world.
Hiawatha Park on Olmsted tour
Seattle Parks Foundation on Saturday hosts a walking tour of Hiawatha Playfield as part of the Olmsted Park Centennial Celebration. The tour begins at 10 a.m. inside the Hiawatha Community Center, Hiawatha Park, 2700 California Ave., in West Seattle’s Admiral District.
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Olmsted-designed park and boulevard system. The centennial will include events and festivities all year long, organized by the Seattle Parks Foundation, Friends of Seattle’s Olmsted Parks, Seattle Parks and Recreation and community partners and businesses around the city.
Hiawatha Park was the first park designated as a city of Seattle landmark. Designed by the Olmsted Brothers in 1910, it was at the time the largest public playfield in Seattle. Upon Hiawatha’s completion, the Parks Board deemed it the "most sightly and best laid out playground in the system." The park’s original design has undergone changes since its creation, which representatives of Friends of Seattle’s Olmsted Parks will outline.
The Hiawatha Park tour is the second in the 12-month series of park tours. The Olmsted firm designed Seattle’s boulevard system, 37 of its parks and playgrounds, the UW campus, and other public and private landscapes. For more information call (206) 332-9900 or see http://www.seattleparksfoundation.org.
Miller/Hull talks about AIA honor
As part of its Honor Series, AIA Seattle sponsors a discussion with designers from Miller/Hull at noon Feb. 20.
In December, Miller/Hull won the AIA Firm Award -- the highest award the AIA gives to an architectural firm. Miller/Hull is the first Washington firm to win the award. Past winners include Cesar Pelli & Associates and Skidmore Owings and Merrill. Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership has also won the award in 1991, and amember of the firm will join the Miller/Hull speaker for the Feb. 20 event. Cost is $35, at the Four Seasons Olympic Hotel. For information, call (206) 448-4938.
Lecture on 'rural studio' for architects
Andrew Freear, co-director of Rural Studio at Auburn State University, will host a lecture at 6:30 p.m. Thursday. Freear will discuss the Rural Studio, green design and recent projects. The lecture, held in Room 147 at University of Washington's Architecture Hall, will be introduced by U.W. architecture professor Steve Badanes.
In 1993, two Auburn University architecture professors, Dennis K. Ruth and the late Samuel Mockbee, established the Auburn University Rural Studio within the university's School of Architecture. The Rural Studio, conceived as a method to improve the living conditions in rural Alabama and to include hands-on experience in an architectural pedagogy, began designing and building homes that fall. Mockbee and Ruth sought funding to begin the studio and, through the years, it has received additional funding which has helped it become a vision of a process to make housing and community projects in one of the poorest regions of the nation.
Students who attend the Rural Studio expand their design knowledge by building what they have designed. The studio seeks solutions to the needs of the community within the community's own context, not from outside it. The Web site is http://www.ruralstudio.org. For a campus map showing Architecture Hall, go to http://www.washington.edu. For information on this free lecture, call (206) 616-2441.